Abstract

e15136 Background: Silibinin, a flavonoid and the major active component of milk thistle, has been as a safe diet supplement for several decades. It has been proved with anti-hepatotoxic properties and pleiotropic anticancer capabilities. Current study aimed to investigate the role of silibinin as potential therapeutic target of colon cancer through antiangiogenesis and its related molecular mechanisms with matrix metalloproteinase- 2 (MMP-2) and activator protein-1 (AP-1). Colon cancer cell line, LoVo cells, treated with a major prognostic factor, interleukin-6 (IL-6), was studied. Methods and Results: By western blot analysis, silibinin suppressed MMP- 2 protein expression in time- and concentration-dependent manners. Furthermore, the inhibitors of JNK/AP-1 binding activity abolished the expression of MMP-2 in IL-6-stimulated LoVo cells, but not PI3K pathways. We also demonstrated that silibinin inhibited IL-6- stimulated LoVo cell migration and further tumor angiogenesis, which similar to the effects from addition with AP-1 inhibitor. By EMSA, the binding activity of AP-1 in LoVo cells was also decreased with silibinin treatment. In addition, the imaging of confocal microscopy revealed that AP-1 presentation was attenuated on IL-6-stimulated LoVo cells plus silibinin treatment. Conclusions: Taken together, these data indicated that silibinin inhibits angiogenesis through the suppression of MMP-2 expression and AP-1 binding activity in colon cancer cells. It suggests a novel anti-metastatic application of silibinin in colon cancer chemoprevention. No significant financial relationships to disclose.

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